|[pic] |Course Syllabus |
| |Axia College/College of Humanities |
| |FP/101 Version 4 |
| |Foundations of Personal Finance |
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Course Description
This course provides an overview of the
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|Week 1 |1.5 |
| | |Ongoing | |
|Nongraded Activities and |Watch the video, Decision to Own a Home vs. Rent, located at the following link: |Week 1 | |
|Preparation |https://ecampus.phoenix.edu/secure/aapd/materials/videos/FP101.html |Day 7 | |
|Video | | | |
|Individual |Resource: Appendix B |Week 1 |5 |
|Personal Financial Planning |Complete the Personal Financial Planning Worksheet located in Appendix B. |Day 7 | |
|Worksheet |Be sure to answer all questions completely. | | |
| |Post your Personal Financial Planning Worksheet as a Microsoft® Word attachment. | | |
|Week Two: Money
Develop a financial plan to feasibly meet our budget constraints (KMAONE, 2013). In order to maintain an in-house
If everyone was the same no one would love their life. In society today, there are many things that try to take away society individuality. For example, in Anthem, a novel by Ayn Rand, and in North Korea there is not much individuality. Individuality has a purpose because if society does not have individuality people are not special, and the world would be dull and boring.
Humanistic theories emerged in 1950s. We have two types of humanistic theories, the first one is Person-centred theory by Carl Rogers which is based on how people see them-selves in relation to their personal experience and the second theory is Self-actualisation by Abraham Maslow which is based on the needs that motivate people. In this paper both theories will be described in detail and also they will be evaluated.
DUE Friday November 1, 2013– This project is due on November 1st before 4:00 pm and is to be submitted in the Accounting Lab – room 200 in the Rands House. The hours for submission of and help with the project will be posted on the class Blackboard site. You will sign your project in to create a record of its being submitted. Be sure your name and the name of your TA are on the front page of the project.
A Person centred approach is about ensuring someone with a disability is at the centre of decisions which relate to their life. A person centred process involves listening, thinking together, coaching, sharing ideas, and seeking feedback. By working in a person centred way we ensure that the individuals we are working with are listened to and that we focus on what matters to the individual and that their families pay attention to how staff support. This can be done with one page profiles, person centred reviews and full PCP’s.
1. According to Maslow, what are the characteristics of self-actualizing people? Why are these characteristics important?
Financial Class: On June 05 you attended a financial class to help you plan accordingly your
Furnish your monthly liabilities towards living. Provide detailed description of various expense heads and liability in amount towards it. Add the value of all obligations to arrive to total obligation for each month. Use separate sheet if needed. Specify if you or your spouse receive monthly benefits of any sort in Section
Carl R. Rogers is known as the founding father of person-centered therapy. He was born in Oak Park, Illinois, in 1902 to a devoted Christian and a civil engineer (Rogers, Kirschenbaum, & Land, 2001). In 1922 Rogers began to doubt his religious teaching from early on in life, he sought a more liberal education at the Union Theological Seminary (Rogers, Kirschenbaum, & Land, 2001). After two years he left to attend Columbia University to study clinical and education psychology. Rogers went on to write four major books: The Clinical Treatment of the Problem Child (1939), Counseling and Psychotherapy: New Concepts in Practice (1942), Client-Centered Therapy (1951), and Psychotherapy and Personality (Rogers & Dymond, 1954) (Walsh, 2010; Patterson, 2007).
Theorists have invested years of research into learning the dynamics of one’s personality. Humanistic and Existential Personality Theories offered perspectives that have proved to be valuable to those researching and exploring how one’s personality develops and expands throughout life. From Maslow’s hierarchy of needs to Carl Rogers’s development of the formative tendency and the actualizing tendency, the range of perspectives is diverse. In this paper, we will analyze how humanistic and existential theories affect individual personalities and give explanation to how these
Purpose: To inform the audience about how small sacrifices today can result in huge dividends in retirement.
1) An individualist is considered to be someone with personality and character, someone who is not easily intimidated by social pressure or customs, someone with a personal opinion and a singular view of the world. Because modern society finds it important that people think independently, decide autonomously and take personal initiatives, the concept of individualism has acquired a positive connotation. However, individualism is also linked with the tendency to withdraw from social life and turn in towards oneself.
There is not a day where my own life lacks social events. A basic day consists of going to work or school, completing homework, and attempting to have a social life with those who are important to me. Being able to manage my social self is a task worth reviewing using the sociological theory of Max Weber and Erving Goffman. Each decision made to manage my life pulls from Weber’s theory of action and rationality; moreover, each situation requires a bit of face by Goffman’s dramaturgy.
Q2. Provide a full-page plot of the Capital Allocation Line for the case in Q1. Label the axes and locate cash, D. Equity, D. Bonds, and your optimal complete portfolio clearly on the plot. You may draw this plot by hand.
This essay will discuss the influence of cultural dimensions on behavior. A cultural dimension is defined as a perspective of a culture based on its values and cultural norms. In particular, Hofstede’s cultural dimension of individualism vs. collectivism will be discussed. Individualism vs collectivism is defined as the preference of a person only being concerned about oneself and looking after oneself, compared to a person who wants to remain in a closely knitted network. These are some terms with definitions which will be used in this essay: the Asch paradigm, which refers to the studies conducted by Solomon Asch, in which he showed his participants different lines and asked them to verbally judge and respond as to what the length of the